Theme Of Class Boundaries In The Undefinable

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Class boundaries play a significant role in “The Undefinable: A Fantasia” and The Return of the Soldier, as these texts create a picture in which those boundaries are done away with, if only for a moment. The women of the lower classes, who are described in the beginning of these stories in negative aesthetic terms, are ‘Otherized,’ due to class distinctions in their appearance and manners. The stories show the progression of the unreliable first person narrator ‘falling for’ the Other, but being unable to describe the woman in artistic terms, they turn to spiritual terminology. This spirituality varies in each story, with the novel describing the Other as a Christian saint and the short story as a Greek muse. The narrators in “The Undefinable” …show more content…

In “The Undefinable,” by the end of the young woman’s first visit, the narrator is appraising her body for its worth in a portrait. The woman views this appraisal with disdain, mocking the “rounded form, healthy flesh, and lively glances” that appeal to the painter, common tropes of upper class portraits (Grand 285). Over the course of her next two visits, the narrator begins to worship and “glorify” her being (Grand 285). In the midst of her glorification, the man is able to paint in “love and reverence” a woman as she is, so that he “may feel her divinity and worship that!” (Grand 282, 284). The goddess-like terms of exaltation that the narrator describes the women with come with a frenzy to paint the ‘soul’ of the young woman, who was “a source of inspiration the like of which no man hitherto has even imagined in art or literature” (Grand 287). The inspiration, which solidifies the woman’s role as the muse, comes from a desire for her soul, not her …show more content…

Jenny cannot communicate the same type of perfection she alluded to in her description of Kitty’s appearances. She searches for why Chris would choose Margaret, and in doing so, she breaks out of artistic terms and begins to describe Margaret as belonging to the spiritual realm. As Chris and Margaret reunite in the garden, the nymphs and Tritons stand by as symbols of exaltation of beauty, but Jenny says “one’s eye lay on the figure in the yellow raincoat,” Margaret (West 58-9). In this scene, the image of beauty is forsaken for the motherly embrace, in which Margaret envelopes Chris. They stood “breast to breast,” and her embrace seemed to have “fed him” (West 59). In this scene, Jenny is setting the stage for the exaltation above the pagan notions of beauty to that of Christ-like service, specfically the service that Margaret can give to Chris as a type of selfless mother

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